![]() It is pretty simple, and may break in bad ways if you are doing something other than my specific workflow (see workflows below). This is a tool I hacked up to fill a need of mine (to get music from Swinsian to my iPhone, and sync back playcounts and ratings). For more see the workflows section below for examples.You can use the above along with -dry-run to get a feel for what sw2iphone will do on the run, with this flag we won't create files on disk (other than temp files, which we clean up), or make changes to the Swinsian database.Whichever is largest will be used, you don't need to include them all. -v or -vv (and super secret option -vvv) will increase the amount of verbosity.This is the sandbox permission request for AppleScript to work with Swinsian. On first run it will probably ask you if you want "Terminal to be able to control Swinsian".We do save the path, you don't have to pass it each time, just when you want to change it. Recommend you set the path to what you want from the start, and if you do change it later, either manually move over the files to the new directory before you run anything with sw2iphone, or start fresh in iTunes. ![]() If you do change the path after mp3s have been created in the old path, be aware that we don't do anything to move them, and they will be recreated next time you export the playlist, and things will get funky (duplicated tracks in iTunes). You can change this by passing in a path after -path.
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